Kazakhstan police raid 3rd church in seven weeks

TARAZ, Kazakhstan — A police raid on a worship service in Kazakhstan is the latest reported incident in a long string of religious liberty violations in the Central Asian country.

The raid, in early March, brought the total to three Baptist churches invaded and fined in the city of Taraz in a seven-week span, according to news sources.

Anti-terrorism police forces have filmed, photographed, fingerprinted and threatened church members, and five people have been levied large fines of one or two months’ wages.

Government officials say they are coming after the churches because they are meeting without government permission. Such religious liberty violations are a continuing trend, and Baptists aren’t the only ones being targeted, according to Forum 18 news service.

Other incidents in 2019 in the country of 18 million people include:

Punishment aimed at Muslims who are praying in ways not sanctioned by the state-controlled Muslim Board. In January, a Muslim in the city of Almaty was fined one month’s wages for saying the word “amen” aloud.

A raid on a group of Hare Krishna devotees who met for chants in an apartment in the city of Atyrau. The case was later dropped.

It’s not a new battle for people of faith in Kazakhstan. Religious freedom in the country began deteriorating in late 2011 after the former Soviet satellite’s government adopted a restrictive law banning unregistered religious activity, according to the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF).

Since 2013, the country’s treatment of religious freedom has been problematic enough to earn it a Tier 2 spot on USCIRF’s annual report, a designation just below Countries of Particular Concern. In December 2016, amendments to the law increased penalties and controls even more. The newest USCIRF report released in December 2018 found the country still holding its place in Tier 2.

Last year, 165 people, organizations and religious communities were prosecuted for the way they exercised their faith, according to Forum 18.

Of these, 139 ended up with some kind of punishment — fines, bans on activity, seizure of materials, jail terms or deportation.

Most churches appeal their fines and refuse to pay them, seeing it as a kind of civil disobedience, according to news reports.

The newest churches fined are no different. Four have appealed their fines, but one — a pensioner — has chosen not to appeal.

“Yakov Fot is a pensioner and he chose not to appeal against his fine,” a church member told Forum 18. “We don’t pay fines voluntarily, so they’ll take the money from his pension.”